Abstract

Self-excited thermoacoustic instability (SETAI) is an undesirable and dangerous phenomenon in combustion systems. However, its control is difficult, thus greatly limiting the development of combustion technology. Our previous works clarified how the premixed chamber length (LP) and equivalence ratio (φ) influence SETAI behavior in a symmetrical hedge premixed combustion system. On real-world sites, however, the supply structure or combustion condition in a multi-flame system could be asymmetric due to space limitations or combustion adjustment needs. This paper aims to clarify the SETAI behavior of a combustion system with an asymmetric supply structure or an asymmetric combustion condition. The results indicate that the sound pressure amplitude under strong oscillation can reach 160 dB, which is about 5% of the total pressure. The SETAI state under the asymmetric condition is determined by the coupling between the heat release oscillation and sound pressure oscillation on each side and their cooperation. The asymmetric supply structure leads to asynchronous heat release oscillations between the two sides; it may be that one promotes oscillation and that the other suppresses it, or that both have a promotion effect but with asynchronous action, thus partly canceling each other out to lower the system’s oscillation intensity. This brings an advantage for controlling SETAI, which can be achieved by only changing one side of the structure. The oscillation amplitude can be reduced by 80–90% by appropriately changing one LP only by ~20%. Under an asymmetric combustion condition with φ differing between the two sides, the heat release oscillation on each side is dependent on the local φ but not the global φ. Consequently, SETAI can also be controlled by changing the distribution but maintaining a constant fuel feeding rate and φ. The concepts identified in this paper demonstrate that SETAI can be effectively controlled by adopting an asymmetric φ distribution or an asymmetric structure of the supply system. This provides a convenient SETAI control approach without affecting the equipment’s thermal performance.

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